“The financial resources available for restoration and conservation have always been negligible. Instead it is preferred to dig, rather than preserve what has already been discovered,” explained former superintendant of the ancient city, Pietro Giovanni Guzzo.The archaeological community faces a serious ethical problem here, as in Iraq and elsewhere, when limited resources are being misallocated in ways that support archaeological discovery but at the cost of leaving sites to the mercy of nature, looters, and tourists. Would a boycott on digging by archaeologists until and unless adequate funding for site conservation and protection is put in place do any good?
Caveat Emptor: What the Dancing Maenad Can Tell Us About the Market for
Looted Art
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Christie's 2019 Auction
In November 2019, ARCA published a blog post raising questions about a
5th-century BCE polychrome antefix depicting a dancing maena...
4 days ago
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